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Chapter 6 Section 3 Mr. Gordon.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Section 3 Mr. Gordon."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Section 3 Mr. Gordon

2 The President’s Staff

3 Executive Office of the President
President’s administration includes all working for executive branch Most are career employees; at top are presidential appointees, who change when new president elected Many belong to Executive Office of the President, including White House Office staff, National Security Council, Council of Economic Advisers Formation of EOP Relatively recent organization Expansion of president’s staff began with Theodore Roosevelt Franklin Roosevelt created new programs, agencies during Great Depression of 1930s 1939: Executive Office of President authorized by Congress Most members nominated by president, confirmed by Senate EOP members often most influential people in administration

4 The White House Office Heart of EOP Duties of Chief of Staff
President’s key personal, political staff Most work in White House or Old Executive Office Building President determines size of staff Chief of Staff manages staff Role varies president to president Duties of Chief of Staff Oversee president’s personal secretary, legal counsel Directs Congressional relations, Cabinet relation teams Deals with presidential mail, appearances, other members of staff Manages speechwriters, press secretary, communications staff The Chief of Staff is the primary presidential adviser who controls all access to the president and helps map political strategy.

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6 National Security Council
National Security Council coordinates security with top military, foreign affairs, intelligence officials Created 1947 in reaction to Cold War rivalry with Soviet Union Activities coordinated by national security adviser appointed by president Council of Economic Advisers Created 1946, Council of Economic Advisers provides expert analysis of economy Studies how trends, events may affect economic policy, how policy affects economy Three members nominated by president, confirmed by Senate Publishes annual Economic Report, study of economy after president submits budget The OMB Office of Management and Budget develops federal budget, oversees execution Gathers information, sets policies on government finances, purchases Largest in EOP, more than 500 employees; headed by appointed director confirmed by Senate

7 The Vice President The Vice Presidency The Early Vice Presidency
Only other elected official in president’s administration Three major duties: presiding over Senate; opening, counting electoral votes; serving as president if president unable to serve—9 have done so The Early Vice Presidency 1800s: role did not amount to much 2nd place in presidential voting became vice president 1804: 12th Amendment required separate ballots Candidate can help balance ticket Early Vice Presidency {continued} The few formal duties pleased some, troubled others Jefferson: A more tranquil and unoffending station could not be found. Garner: the spare tire on the automobile of government The Modern Vice Presidency Since 1970s, presidents rely more heavily on vice presidents to make policy, carry out programs Have own staffs, more interaction Vice president’s office close to Oval Office in West wing

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9 Organization of heads of executive departments, known as secretaries
The Cabinet Organization of heads of executive departments, known as secretaries Executive departments responsible for carrying out laws, administering programs, making regulations Main task of each department head to formulate, carry out president’s policies As Cabinet, secretaries act as advisory body to president; nominated by president, confirmed by Senate

10 Separation of Powers The Cabinet’s History The Cabinet Today
Duties outlined by Article II of Constitution Chief executive Chief administrator Commander-in-chief Foreign policy leader Chief agenda setter The Cabinet Today Nearly four times as large as first cabinet 16 official cabinet positions, including vice president Other high-ranking officials like chief of staff may be invited to join cabinet Some presidents rely more heavily on Cabinet than others.

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